期刊论文详细信息
BMC Medical Education
Medical students’ perception of changes in assessments implemented during the COVID-19 pandemic
Research
Martyn Kingsbury1  Elizabeth Hauke2  Prakriti Khanal3  Francesca Bladt3  Anusha Mahesh Prabhu3  Sohag Nafis Saleh3 
[1] Centre for Higher Education Research, Imperial College London, London, UK;Centre for Languages, Culture, and Communication, Imperial College London, London, UK;Imperial College School of Medicine, Imperial College London, London, UK;
关键词: COVID-19;    Assessment;    Medical education;    Examinations;    Online examination;    Open-book;    Supervised;    Medical students;    Proctoring;   
DOI  :  10.1186/s12909-022-03787-9
 received in 2021-12-07, accepted in 2022-09-29,  发布年份 2022
来源: Springer
PDF
【 摘 要 】

BackgroundCOVID-19 posed many challenges to medical education in the United Kingdom (UK). This includes implementing assessments during 4 months of national lockdowns within a 2-year period, where in-person education was prohibited. This study aimed to identify medical school assessment formats emerging during COVID-19 restrictions, investigate medical students’ perspectives on these and identify influencing factors.MethodsThe study consisted of two phases: a questionnaire asking medical students about assessment changes they experienced, satisfaction with these changes and preference regarding different assessments that emerged. The second phase involved semi-structured interviews with medical students across the UK to provide a deeper contextualized understanding of the complex factors influencing their perspectives.ResultsIn the questionnaire responses, open-book assessments had the highest satisfaction, and were the preferred option indicated. Furthermore, in the case of assessment cancellation, an increase in weighting of future assessments was preferred over increase in weighting of past assessments. Students were also satisfied with formative or pass-fail assessments.Interview analyses indicate that although cancellation or replacement of summative assessments with formative assessments reduced heightened anxiety from additional COVID-19 stressors, students worried about possible future knowledge gaps resulting from reduced motivation for assessment-related study. Students’ satisfaction level was also affected by timeliness of communication from universities regarding changes, and student involvement in the decision-making processes. Perceived fairness and standardisation of test-taking conditions were ranked as the most important factors influencing student satisfaction, followed closely by familiarity with the format. In contrast, technical issues, lack of transparency about changes, perceived unfairness around invigilation, and uncertainty around changes in assessment format and weighting contributed to dissatisfaction.ConclusionsOnline open-book assessments were seen as the most ideal amongst all participants, and students who experienced these were the most satisfied with their assessment change. They were perceived as most fair and authentic compared to real-life medical training. We seek to inform educators about student perceptions of successful assessment strategies under COVID-19 restrictions and provide evidence to allow debate on ongoing assessment reform and innovation. While this work looks specifically at assessment changes during COVID-19, understanding factors affecting student perception of assessment is applicable to examinations beyond COVID-19.

【 授权许可】

CC BY   
© The Author(s) 2022

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